Showing posts with label west lancashire borough council. Show all posts
Showing posts with label west lancashire borough council. Show all posts

Friday, May 04, 2012

West Lancashire Local Election Results 2012

Council Logo

The West Lancashire Local Election Results 2012

The votes have been counted and the results are in and online. Click West Lancashire Elections Results 2012

Despite a car crash outside Ormskirk Town Hall, the count got underway as planned.

The Conservatives held on by their fingernails and retained control of the borough council winning 28 seats, closely followed by a resurgent Labour, with 26 seats.

Do you have some community news from around the Ormskirk area to share or a story to tell? Yes!

Tuesday, April 17, 2012

Borough Elections 3rd May 2012 - Are you registered to vote?

Use your vote or lose your voice
Use your vote or lose your voice

Borough Elections 3rd May 2012 - Are you registered to vote?

The West Lancashire Borough Elections are on the 3rd May 2012.  If you are not registered to vote, you cannot have your say in who governs locally and how they govern locally.

It is really simple to register and you can do it now by visiting aboutmyvote.co.uk 

Remember if you don't vote, then you don't get a say on local issues that affect you your family.

Make sure you're registered to vote
Make sure you're registered to vote

The following is a list of the main services provided by West Lancashire Borough Council.
  • Benefits: housing benefits and council tax benefits are processed by the borough council
  • Council tax and business rates: West Lancashire collects the money that is spent by County and the Police
  • Environmental health: this includes food safety, pollution and dog control
  • Leisure facilities: this includes country parks, the ranger service, sports pitches and sports development. Our pools and sports centres are run by a leisure trust
  • Parks and open spaces: playgrounds and parks in the district
  • Planning and building control: all planning applications and most building control inspections
  • Refuse collection and recycling: the collection of waste and recycling from your home
  • Street cleaning: West Lancashire is responsible for cleaning all streets except the major highways
Although 75% of your Council Tax is spent by the Lancashire County Council, the rest is spent by West Lancashire Borough Council on delivering the services listed above.  If you don't vote then you don't get a say on how these services are delivered.

Click the following link West Lancashire Borough Elections to learn more about the upcoming elections.

Do you have some community news from around the Ormskirk area to share or a story to tell? Yes!

Friday, February 17, 2012

Yew Tree Farm Development Burscough Video interview with West Lancashire Councillor Martin Forshaw Borough Council Portfolio Holder Planning responsible for The Local Plan Feb 16th 2012



Interview with Councillor Martin Forshaw, Portfolio Holder Planning and Transportation West Lancashire Borough Council responsible for the Local Plan.

A question and answer session specifically relating to housing develpment in West Lancashire as part of the 2012-2027 Local Plan, using Yew Tree Farm in Burscough as a working example.

4,650 houses need to be built in West Lancashire.  500 of which are to be built in Burscough, West Lancashire.

The proposed Yew Tree Farm Development in Burscough serves as the example in this interview with the locally elected official responsible for planning.

Councillor Martin Forshaw is asked many of the questions which have come to the fore during the last six weeks of public consultation.

Councillor Martin Forshaw provides categoric reassurances in some areas and points to the future Master Plan in others.

This is how the planning process works throughout the country, not just in West Lancashire.

If you're a West Lancashire resident keen to see your elected officials held to account and answering questions, watch this video. If you don't like or disagree with the answers and have a better plan, comment below, let your elected officials know.  Better yet, stand for election yourself!

If you're resident elsewhere in England and interested in how housing is developed in your area, use this interview to become acquainted with the terminology in use in councils right across the country.

Thursday, January 26, 2012

Read the West Lancashire Borough Council Local Plan document

West Lancashire Local Plan document (front cover)
Read the actual West Lancashire Local Plan Preferred Options document.

The Local Plan is available for download from the West Lancashire Borough Council Website. Alternatively, I have also made it available to read online at scribd.com

Prefaced by Councillor Martin Forshaw Portfolio Holder for Planning and Transportation West Lancashire Borough Council January 2012.
West Lancashire has a wonderful mix of vibrant towns and picturesque villages, and boasts some of the most beautiful and productive countryside in the UK. It is vital that we manage,guide and encourage development within the Borough to meet the economic and social aspirations of our towns and villages and the communities within them, while protecting our environment for future generations.
The Local Plan Preferred Options represent an important shift in the preparation of a Development Plan Document for West Lancashire, with a new-style Local Plan replacing the Core Strategy that was being prepared as part of a Local Development Framework for the Borough.

This document has been developed by considering all the information provided by the Council's evidence base and the results of previous public consultations on the issues and options and preferred options stages of the Core Strategy preparation and takes into account the latest direction given by the Government on preparing local planning policy.

Ultimately, the Local Plan will directly or indirectly affect all residents and communities within the Borough. Therefore, it is important that we hear from you on what is being proposed in order to help us to make an informed decision on what the final Local Plan should include.

I very much look forward to hearing your views on the proposals and policies within this document.

Councillor Martin Forshaw Portfolio Holder for Planning and Transportation West Lancashire Borough Council.

Once you have read the document, post your comments below.  What questions do you want answered, let me know and I'll put them to your local representatives.

Wednesday, January 25, 2012

Part 2 of 2 Video interview with Burscough Conservative Councillor Jason Grice about the Yew Tree Farm Development ...


Part 2 of 2
Matthew Wright, in a frank and unedited interview, continues the discussion with Burscough West Conservative Councillor Jason Grice
  • the need for additional utilities
  • the need for improved roads infrastructure
  • the problem of increased traffic congestion
  • the need for additional amenities
  • the choice of location
  • the use of green belt land
  • what are brown site alternatives
  • what are the benefits to of new jobs, economic regeneration etc.
    In response, what do you think of the case made so far by those interviewed?
    • Are the protesters a vocal minority, trying to hold the tide back? Yes, No?
    • Three years on down the consultation path, Is there an element of inevitability to the final outcome?
    • Should we be negotiating hard for further guarantees, not trying to turn our backs to the metaphorical builders lorry hurtling down the road towards us.
    • Where does the argument go next, what further questions should be asked and to whom?
    • Or, is it all completely irrelevant as the nearby impending Fracking projects, will in future just cause the ground beneath our very feet to just part and swallow us up?
    Post your comments now.

    Part 1 of 2 Video interview with Burscough Conservative Councillor Jason Grice Yew Tree Farm Development



    Part 1 of 2
    Matthew Wright, in a frank and unedited interview, discusses with Burscough West Conservative Councillor Jason Grice
    • the need for additional utilities
    • the need for improved roads infrastructure
    • the problem of increased traffic congestion
    • the need for additional amenities
    • the choice of location
    • the use of green belt land
    • what are brown site alternatives
    • what are the benefits of new jobs, economic regeneration etc.
    In response, what do you think of the case made so far by those interviewed?
    • Are the Burscough Yew Tree Farm protesters a vocal minority, trying to hold the tide back? Yes, No?
    • Three years on down the West Lancashire Local Plan consultation path, Is there an element of inevitability to the final outcome?
    • Should we be negotiating hard for further guarantees, not trying to turn our backs to the metaphorical builders lorry hurtling down the road towards us.
    • Where does the argument go next, what further questions should be asked and to whom?

    • Or, is it all completely irrelevant as the nearby impending Fracking projects, will in future just cause the ground beneath our very feet to part and swallow us up?
    Post your comments now.

    Sunday, January 22, 2012

    Burscough Yew Tree Farm Video interview regarding the development with local residents Michelle Blair and Gavin Rattray



    Burscough Yew Tree Farm development Interview with local residents Michelle Blair and Gavin Rattray who are against the proposals.  Michelle and Gavin are members of Burscough Action Group

    The interview was recorded outside the meeting room of the West Lancashire Borough Council "Meet the planners" session at Burscough Wharf on Saturday 21st January 2012